“We’ve been protesting here at Disneyland for weeks,” Theresa Smith told me. “Because of the recent shootings, now everybody’s starting to pay attention to what’s happening here in Anaheim.”
Smith, a longtime Anaheim resident whose son, Caesar Cruz, was shot and killed by police in a 2009 incident that she still demands answers about, persists in peacefully protesting before the Magic Kingdom because she has to. Thanks, in no small part, to living just a short drive from the vast entertainment empire symbolically centered on Harbor Boulevard, Smith and other Anaheim parents know what what the world outside of Anaheim will soon come to realize: that if they are to protect their children from further extreme violence from the police, Latinos here and across the United States will literally have to defend themselves from Mickey Mouse and his militarized minions.
The current crisis in Anaheim began following a surreal and shocking incident in which Anaheim police unleashed a K9 police dog on and shot rubber bullets at a crowd of local small children, mothers with babies and terrified parents protesting against the police who shot and killed their unarmed neighbor, Manuel Diaz. In the wake of these violent incidents, street-level reality and Disneyesque fantasy are fusing in uniquely dangerous and strange ways. The response to the situation by both the Anaheim police and the media has magically moved reports of violence away from the concerns of Smith and other residents and on to the “violence” of “outside protesters”—kicking police cars, burning garbage cans, vandalism.
When viewed from outside of the very poor, overwhelmingly Latino community in Anaheim, Disneyland itself initially looked and felt like a funny foil for jokes that lightened the gravity of the bloodshed in the tiny city, where a militarized police department has killed three men in less than a week. But in a span of days, all this changed.
The spectacular contrast between the image of police “protecting” children in Disneyland and the images of those same police shooting rubber bullets at Latino children in Anaheim have made more obvious the lesser-known, local role of the “Happiest Place on Earth:” Creating a Disneyfied image of a city in which huge swaths live in deep poverty and under constant harassment of the Anaheim police and other security forces.
In the aftermath of the shooting of Manuel Diaz, Anaheim has, for many Latinos, come to symbolize the institutionalization of official police efforts and extra-official corporate efforts to distract, distort and deny the bloody on-the-ground realities that Smith and other local residents are desperately trying to keep in the public mind.
Just when we thought that the images coming out of Southern California could not get any more bizarre, Anaheim police decided to engage in their own imagineering. After more than a week of protests, the Anaheim police deployed officers dressed in military outfits and wielding military equipment, including what appeared to be hand-held rocket launchers capable of launching wither rockets or beanbags. The military fatigues, camouflage, boots and heavy weaponry caused many to wonder were we watching a repeat of the images of national guardsmen deployed during L.A.’s social explosion in 1992.
Though the display of militarized police power ran the risk of moving the situation in Anaheim to tragic-comic proportions, the move by controversy-ridden Anaheim police Chief John Welton served multiple and very strategic functions. Consider how, for example, the deployment instilled fear among local community members. Gabriel San Roman, a reporter with the Orange County Weekly and Anaheim native who still lives in the affected community, told me he thought the operation resembled a “military psyop,” or psychological operations like those used in Afghanistan and other counterinsurgency settings across the world. Other Anaheim residents report increased fear of protest, as well.
At the same time, the deployment of the militarized-police deflected from the true source of deadly violence in Anaheim—the Anaheim police. By positioning themselves in front of Disneyland for all the local, national and global media to see, Anaheim PD is trying to divert media coverage away from images of a department shooting at a crowd of children and toward those of brave troops protecting the Happiest Place on Earth from marauding Latinos. And the local media, including media owned by Disney, appear more than willing to join them, as much of the reporting in Southern California includes images and stories about police “clashing” with “violent” “outsiders” described in the city’s press releases.
Though the roots of the Anaheim conflicts lie in little-covered police violence taking place in working-class Latino neighborhoods, the media treatment of the violence and protests there resemble more the frames and reportage that were eventually applied to Occupy: police-military “cleaning up” after the violent acts of unruly, dirty and anonymous subversives threatening the public good, in this case the public good embodied by Disneyland.
Though Disney remains officially silent about violence and protests (except for a tweet dispelling rumors that visitors were forced to remain behind the gated confines of the Kingdom), Disney and its multiple and intersecting media businesses wield direct institutional power in the life of Anaheim.
Disneyland—the motor of the local tourism and entertainment economy—is the digital age equivalent of the all-controlling Octopus in the classic California novel by Frank Norris. It controls (and owns) or profoundly influences local media, the land, the city council and, of course, the local police of this small city. On the ground, the ginormous power of the company is on display nowhere better than in its successful effort to block 1,500 units of affordable housing near the hallowed area known as “the Resort Area.” Whatever disturbs the flow of the local entertainment economy centered around the Resort Area is deserving of whatever police deem necessary, a mandate readily boosted by local media.
Anaheim Mayor Tom Tait has invited the president of Disneyland to lead the Anaheim business community in taking “a leadership role” in moving the city out of the current crisis. The effort may well become Anaheim’s own “Rebuild L.A.,” the largely forgotten and failed effort led by Disney and other corporations that were supposed to “rebuild” South Central Los Angeles and the rest of the city after the LAPD’s violence sparked a social explosion.
But there is good news in all this: The Latino community is losing its fear of the violent police in Anaheim and across the country, a theme not reported or commented on. Among the less-reported themes and images coming out of Anaheim are those of Latinos clamoring for justice. Powerful images of Latino children, youth and families standing defiantly before the police capture the only force that can bring an end to the official violence: protest and people power.
This article was originally published by Colorlines.




Comments
I moved to Anaheim around the corner from Anna Drive in December 2011. Since moving here this is what I deal with on daily basis in that neighborhood:
1. A shooting erupted from gang crossfire and my children were playing on our front patio. The man was killed in front of his 2 babies and his pregnant wife who had to be taken to the hospital. The shooter drove by and looked directly at my children, they couldn't sleep for weeks after that.
2. In March and again on the day that man was shot and killed I found to large butcher knives on my door step. The 2nd one I handed to the police. I also went directly to the gang that I regularly push off my steps and advised the "chief" that this was unacceptable and that I would certainly launch my own war against them if my child is killed. Please note, I have an autistic child who looks in the bushes for snails in the morning and lizards when its hot, I don't want a gun left.
3. The night of riot starting we had 3 gang members fighting in the street. A girl was yelling for help. I called police the cops got there and told the men to drop on the ground. The one that had the gun fled. The other 2 men started swearing at the cop and calling him names. The cop threw the man in the squad car and then the girl started yelling at the cops not to arrest him! Both men were arrested with drugs. A short time after the cops left the girl came back and grabbed a back out of the bushes, I don't know what.
3. I have to chase the gang bangers off my steps every day. I have taught my dog to pee where they are sitting to avoid them coming back. Yesterday the girl refused to move and my dog peed in her normal spot which just happened to be our stairs, the girls left.
Lastly, look at both memorials. You will East Side and "black and white" references in each memorial. They are glorifying street terrorism. We are being deceived and that community of trash is asking Anaheim to turn a blind eye to crime. There have been 13 murders this year alone from gang violence in Anaheim.
I support the APD because they are the only ones protecting my family from the community.
Living in Anaheim is a filty place and they need to clear out the illegals and jail the gang members. I haven't seen any racism but I have seen plenty of drugs and crime since moving to Anaslime.
the cops advised me to move. When I have the money in two months you bet I will be moving to a better area. Please support them this isn't a racism issue, its a street terrorism issue.
With the murder of Pralith Pralourng in San Francisco, and the murder of Manuel Diaz in Anaheim, it is becoming increasingly obvious that American law enforcement has decided that it is now open season on certain minorities.
SEE: https://www.maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=215510872499841685660.0004c577c...
Just wanted to comment and say that I've been aware of these protests and the preceding police killing that caused it since it started. I was going to take my son and his friend to Disney Land this week, but have decided not to. I would rather support some other destination (like a national park) rather then the City of Anaheim.
Tucson Police Department came to my house and beat up my son when he wasn't resisting he had been restrained by two officers and the grabbed me and slammed me against a wooden post and threatened to slug me in the face these officers told me they could do whatever they wanted because my son had a history and no one would believe me over them. I feel helpless they could have killed him I don't know what to do. What can I do? I dont the police and am fearful of them.
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